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Evaluation designs for adequacy, plausibility and probability of public health programme performance and impact.

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TLDR
It is argued that the answer to this question is essential for choosing an appropriate evaluation design, drawing upon examples from the fields of health and nutrition, and a framework is proposed for deciding upon appropriate evaluation designs.
Abstract
The question of why to evaluate a programme is seldom discussed in the literature. The present paper argues that the answer to this question is essential for choosing an appropriate evaluation design. The discussion is centered on summative evaluations of large-scale programme effectiveness, drawing upon examples from the fields of health and nutrition but the findings may be applicable to other subject areas. The main objective of an evaluation is to influence decisions. How complex and precise the evaluation must be depends on who the decision maker is and on what types of decisions will be taken as a consequence of the findings. Different decision makers demand not only different types of information but also vary in their requirements of how informative and precise the findings must be. Both complex and simple evaluations, however, should be equally rigorous in relating the design to the decisions. Based on the types of decisions that may be taken, a framework is proposed for deciding upon appropriate evaluation designs. Its first axis concerns the indicators of interest, whether these refer to provision or utilization of services, coverage or impact measures. The second axis refers to the type of inference to be made, whether this is a statement of adequacy, plausibility or probability. In addition to the above framework, other factors affect the choice of an evaluation design, including the efficacy of the intervention, the field of knowledge, timing and costs. Regarding the latter, decision makers should be made aware that evaluation costs increase rapidly with complexity so that often a compromise must be reached. Examples are given of how to use the two classification axes, as well as these additional factors, for helping decision makers and evaluators translate the need for evaluation--the why--into the appropriate design--the how.

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Avaliação de redes de atenção à saúde: contribuições da integralidade

TL;DR: O Ministério da Saúde (MS) vem promovendo um movimento de institucionalização da avaliação of política de saúde and dos serviços as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Evaluating the impact of an intervention to increase uptake of modern contraceptives among adolescent girls (15–19 years) in Nigeria, Ethiopia and Tanzania: the Adolescents 360 quasi-experimental study protocol

TL;DR: The primary objective of the outcome evaluation is to assess the impact of A360 on the modern contraceptive prevalence rate (mCPR) among sexually active girls aged 15–19 years in Nigeria, Ethiopia and Tanzania.
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Valuing the Diversity of Research Methods to Advance Nutrition Science.

TL;DR: Recognition of the value of contributions from well-executed nutrition science derived from the various approaches used in the discipline, as well as appreciation of how their layering will yield the strongest evidence base, will provide a basis for greater productivity and impact.
Journal ArticleDOI

Software program to systematize data for planning public health actions

TL;DR: Aplicativo PACOTAPS (Aplaçativo para atencao primaria em saude) desenvolvimento em linguagem Visual Basic 5.0 as mentioned in this paper was used to evaluate the atendimentos realizados in two unidades basicas de saude.
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Does accessibility to antiretroviral care improve after down-referral of patients from hospitals to health centres in rural South Africa?

TL;DR: It is suggested that down-referred patients take antiretroviral treatment to save time and money, feel more respected, perceive lower stigma and show better adherence levels, but unintended consequences include increased costs of using private physicians and self-care, highlighting the need to further promote the potential gains ofdown-referral interventions in resource-poor settings.
References
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Book

The Theory and Practice of Econometrics

TL;DR: The Classical Inference Approach for the General Linear Model, Statistical Decision Theory and Biased Estimation, and the Bayesian Approach to Inference are reviewed.
Book

Case-Control Studies: Design, Conduct, Analysis

TL;DR: Case-control studies, often called 'retrospective' studies, provide a research method for investigating factors that may prevent or cause disease.
Journal ArticleDOI

Why we need observational studies to evaluate the effectiveness of health care

Nick Black
- 11 May 1996 - 
TL;DR: The view is widely held that experimental methods (randomised controlled trials) are the "gold standard" for evaluation and that observational methods have little or no value, but this ignores the limitations of randomised trials.
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